Raspberry Thumbprint Cookies Recipe

Raspberry Thumbprint Cookies.
Raspberry, Apricot and Strawberry Thumbprint Cookies

Raspberry Thumbprint Cookies are fun to make, delicious to eat, and festive for any holiday celebration. Try your own favorite jam. We like raspberry the best.

Dwaine and I make our own black raspberry jam.  He learned how from his mom back on the farm, where they would grow black raspberries every year, harvesting them in long-sleeve flannel shirts to keep from getting sliced to ribbons on the thorns.  The family finally convinced her to submit her jam recipe to the county fair, where she won the blue ribbon for best raspberry jam!  I remember seeing it, hidden in a drawer.  She was a very modest woman.

Dwaine worked with her many times making jam, which is more of an art than merely a recipe.  He transplanted several black raspberry vines here, and now we collect them each year.  So, with all this jam in the house, finding good recipes to use it has fallen to me.

Raspberry Thumbprint Cookies

One that’s always a hit is this Raspberry Thumbprint Cookies Recipe. They are colorful, not too sweet, crispy on the outside and just a bit chewy on the inside. Plus, they are really easy to make once you follow the hints here. Raspberry Thumbprint Cookies are perfect for any occasion – simple enough for a picnic but fancy enough for a gold-plated holiday party.  I scoured through several recipes to find the one that worked most consistently and  produced the right balance of sweetness and chewy texture.

Tips for Perfect Raspberry Thumbprint Cookies

Some caveats if you’re looking for a good recipe:  Some recipes call for rolling the dough in sugar prior to pressing out the depression.  If you do this, you’ll need to fill the depression with jam after taking them cookies out of the oven.  If you do it before, the jam will bleed into the sugar producing a less-than-attractive cookie.  (Experience talking).  Personally, I don’t think you need the sugar coating at all.

Parchment paper on the cookie sheet is important – they can stick and again, scraping them off will ruin your nice cookie.

Some recipes call for no leavening agent at all – no baking powder, no baking soda.  Baking soda alone will do nothing in this recipe – there’s no acid to react with it, so forget those recipes altogether.  I do use a small amount of baking powder, as I found the ones without leavening baked up harder – even leaving a uncooked flour taste.  They looked pretty – which seems to be the only criteria for Pinterest recipes.  But they were a 4/10 on the taste scale.

And finally, many recipes call for just the yolk in the egg, or maybe two yolks.  I use one whole egg and didn’t notice any difference at all.  This meets my “I Hate Waste” criteria.

Raspberry Thumbprint Cookies

Tried-and-true recipe that produces a crispy outside, chewy middle, and a very attractive appearance.  I use raspberry jam (and no, you cannot substitute jelly).  But any thick jam will do.  Mix them up for a rainbow effect!
Prep Time15 minutes
Cook Time20 minutes
Total Time35 minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Keyword: Black Raspberry Recipes, Raspberry Desserts, Raspberry Thumbprint Cookies
Servings: 24 cookies
Author: Don Herman

Ingredients

  • 1 3/4 cup All-purpose flour
  • 1/4 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 2/3 cup sugar
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 3/4 cup butter
  • 1/2 cup raspberry jam or other flavor
  • 1 lg egg

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350F.  Line cookie sheets with parchment paper
  • In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder and salt.
  • In a large bowl, beat the butter and sugar together until fluffy – about 5 minutes.  Add vanilla and egg and beat to combine.
  • Add the dry ingredients to the butter mixture in 3 parts, beating gently just until the flour is incorporated.  
  • With your hand, grab the dough and roll it around a bit to make sure all the dry ingredients are combined.  You should have a soft lump of dough.

Prepare the Cookies for Baking

  • This process will go quickly if you prepare before you dive in.  Have your prepared dough and lined cookie sheet nearby.  Find a flat tablespoon measure – one that you can scrape level against a bowl (see photo).  Fill a 1/4 measuring cup about 1/2 full of flour.  Open and stir the jam so that it can drop from a teaspoon.  Now you’re ready.
    Tablespoon measure
  • With a flat tablespoon, scrape up a tablespoon of dough, leveling it against the bowl. Peel it out with your fingers and roll it into a ball. Drop the ball on your cookie sheet. Immediately press a depression into the ball with another, smaller round half-teaspoon (see photo).  Place the small spoon into the flour, giving it a good coat.  This will make it easy to release in the next cookie.
    Leave about 2″ between cookies.  They do spread a bit.  
    If you wait to make the depressions, the dough will dry out and you’ll get cracked cookies. 
    Round 1/2 Teaspoon
  • When the sheet is full, fill each depression with about 3/4 tsp of jam.  I use a simple table spoon – it slides off easier.  
    Unbaked Raspberry Thumbprint Cookies
  • Bake the cookies at 350F for 15 or 16 minutes – just until you can see some golden color along the bottom edges.  Remove from oven and cool on the sheet for about five minutes, then cool on a rack.
  • Store tightly sealed.  They will dry out very quickly, so to retain the moist chewiness don’t leave them out!

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Did you try the recipe? Make any other variations? I’d love to hear from you.

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